From the monthly archives:

August 2009

Following on from the great post over at Headstream from Chief Digital Officer - Steve Sponder about brands need to adopt different mindsets, models, approaches and strategies. To help brands adapt to this change, myself and the team at Headstream have been working closely with Steve FivebyFive (Headstream is an agency of FivebyFive) to develop a Social Media Strategic Framework. This framework will enable brands to strategically navigate through, as opposed to just blindly rolling out the latest, must-have tactics.

Social Media Strategic Framework

Our Social Media Strategic Framework (SMSF) sets out a number of key areas for organsiations to consider:

1) Social Media Strategy - As organisations start to understand the far reaching implications of social media they quickly appreciate the need to define a social media strategy that mutually supports other strategies within the organisation.

2) Influencer Networks - Influencers will play different roles within different market-sectors, so the key here is to understand how to identify them, the role they play and how to engage with them.

3) Brand Outposts - Don’t just set-up a Twitter account because everyone’s doing it. Take a step back and think about how your outposts will support your social media strategy, who will run your outposts and where the content will come from?

4) Reputation Management - Arguably, real-time eavesdropping on what people are saying about your brand is one of the most immediate benefits of social media marketing although, conversely engaging in a negative conversation could escalate in a full blown crisis so again a clear separate strategy is required here.

5) Brands with something interesting, useful and/or relevant to say should be aiming to start conversations, using branded content as social currency. A distribution strategy will then ensure that engaging content has the best opportunity to kick-start a conversation.

In conclusion, the strategic intent should be for organisations to be an authentic part of the social media community and appropriate conversations, along the way there will be immediate, tangible results although like branding, social media is about the long-haul. It’s about systemically and consistently building the reputation of the brand where the pay-back is ultimately brand equity.

I hope that you find the Social Media Strategic Framework interesting and that it builds on, and continues, the conversation.

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The following is an example of the Twitterati engaging with their followers and crowdsourcing ideas for a completely transparent and viral promotion as blogged about by Headstream

Jason Bradbury @jasonbradbury is a respected UK TV presenter and children’s author and well known for being the presenter of Five TV’s The Gadget Show where he tests the latest kit in the most perilous situations.

Most recently he has been testing the Samsung i8910HD phone as part of the blogger/Twitter campaign managed by social media agency Headstream.

Because Jason is very interactive on Twitter it made perfect sense for him to engage with his Twitter followers and give the phone away by crowdsourcing for ideas on how the promotion should be set up to win the handset.

On Tuesday 4th August 2009 Jason tweeted:

@jasonbradbury: I’ve got a Samsung i8919HD phone to give away! FREE! I want ideas for Twitter/my blog 4 how to give it away!?

Following this tweet Jason was then contacted by many of his followers with ideas and suggestions, but both Jason and Twitter did not come to a conclusion, so he communicated with Twitter that he will be back the next day to discuss.

On Friday 5th August 2009 Jason then arranged with followers to be around at 1pm so that they could communicate with him and he could crowdsource ideas:

@jasonbradbury:.. So come on then ideas for how I should give one of u lot a new Samsung i8910HD. It was given to me and I thought I’d give it to u

Again Jason received a huge volume of responses to this with creative ideas with the central theme of dead/old phones being the dominant theme. Jason then tweeted:

@jasonbradbury:.. or how about #ZombiePhone. I pick from the best #ZombiePhone images of you acting like a living dead next to your old, dead phone?

The Twitter community then provided their input into the #ZombiePhone promotion and a couple of responses from the hundered supported this idea:

@sarahjane365: #ZombiePhone I think I would win since I have about ten old dead phones in my possession

@madgerald: Love the #ZombiePhone idea

This Twitter crowdsourcing helped cement the competition mechanic for Jason:

@jasonbranbury: Your ideas rock - but I like #ZombiePhone. So here come the rules of the competition!!!

@jasonbradbury: #ZombiePhone. 1) Free phone to best pic of undead phone & user 2) use hashtag 3) I pick my fave 9.30am Monday 10 Aug.

You can follow the engagement around the #ZombiePhone competition with some really creative user generated content up until 9.30am GMT on Monday 10th August.

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